17 February 2011
Plans to impose a 10% Housing Benefit cut on anyone unemployed for more than a year have been dropped from the government’s Welfare Reform Bill, published today.
The U-turn was welcomed by the Chartered Institute of Housing, which had campaigned against the plans along with other organisations and charities in the sector. The cut, announced in the June Emergency Budget, would have affected anyone claiming Jobseekers Allowance for more than 12 months.
Richard Capie, deputy chief executive of the CIH, said: ‘This is an important and welcome concession. Government has recognised that this is a draconian measure that would have undermined households’ abilities to pay the rent, regardless of the job market they were living in, or the level of endeavour they were putting in to find work.’
But he said the sector remained ‘deeply concerned’ about other aspects of the Welfare Reform Bill. This includes the decision to link local housing allowance to the Consumer Prices Index, a lower measure of inflation than the Retail Prices Index, which it is currently tied to.
‘As with the JSA decision, we hope that Parliament and government in particular will revisit some important aspects of the legislation, which for all their good intentions, remain deeply flawed and unsustainable,’ Capie added.
The Bill also includes measures to tackle under-occupancy of social housing, as well as the introduction of a benefit cap to limit the total amount a household can receive to about £26,000 a year.
Central to the Bill is the creation of a Universal Credit, designed to bring all benefits and credits into one payment by 2013 and make sure people are better off in work than out of it. Details of the new Work Programme, to be provided by the private and voluntary sectors, are also in the Bill.
Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith said: ‘Our reforms will end the absurdity of a system where people too often get rewarded for doing the wrong thing, and those who strive to do the best by their families get penalised.’
The Bill would provide a ‘fair deal for the taxpayer’, he added.
But unions accused the government of ‘manipulating the benefits system to force people back to work’ at a time of rising unemployment.
Unite assistant general secretary Gail Cartmail said there was ‘a large degree of dysfunction’ between ‘Duncan Smith’s desire to make work pay and the hardline economic and fiscal policies of Chancellor George Osborne, which are designed to sacrifice jobs in pursuit of the Holy Grail of deficit reduction’.
Under the reforms, council tax benefit will be replaced by local rebate schemes from 2013, in an attempt to cut the costs by 10%. In a written ministerial statement laid before the Commons today, Local Government Secretary Eric Pickles said the coalition ‘remains committed to retaining council tax support for the most vulnerable people in society’.He added: ‘Combined with other incentives – such as the New Homes Bonus and our proposals for the local retention of business rates – these changes will give councils a greater stake in the economic future of their local area, so supporting the government’s wider agenda to enable stronger, balanced economic growth across the country.’
A full consultation on council tax rebate schemes will be undertaken in due course.